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William Edmondson (Quaker)

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Name
  
William Edmondson


Role
  
Quaker

Died
  
1712, Rosenallis, Republic of Ireland

Books
  
A History of the British Presence in Chile: From Bloody Mary to Charles Darwin and the Decline of British Influence

William Edmundson or Edmondson (1627—1712) was the founder of Quakerism in Ireland. He was born in Little Musgrave, Westmorland, England in 1627. His parents died when he was young, and so he was raised by an uncle. He was apprenticed as a carpenter at York, and after completion, he joined the Parliamentary Army during the English Civil War. He went to Scotland in 1650. He also took part in the Battle of Worcester. While serving in the military, he was first introduced to Quakerism while stationed at Chesterfield. He was discharged and eventually went to live in County Antrim, Ireland.

He established the first Meeting House in Lurgan, Ireland in 1654. He was imprisoned several times, but was released thereafter.

After this first establishment, Edmundson spent the rest of his life building the Society of Friends in Ireland. He lived most of his life in the once Quaker village of Rosenallis, Co Laois (aka County Leix, aka Queen's County), where he had a residence at Tineal House. Edmundson also visited America and debated the Protestant theologian Roger Williams in Rhode Island (New England) in 1672 with several other Quakers, and Williams was particularly offended by Edmunson's perceived rudeness. The debate was published in Williams' George Fox Digged out of his Burrowes.

References

William Edmundson (Quaker) Wikipedia